Dave Boertman is a household word in
the sport of drag racing,
where he was among the best in the world for nearly three decades. The 1958
Muskegon Catholic Central graduate got
his start in the sport in 1962, when
he went with some friends to the Central Michigan dragway. The high speeds
back then were 76 mph, but Boertman had started a lifelong obsession that
would take him to much higher speeds at venues around the country.
Boertman won 17 National Hot Red Association super stock
eliminator events, five world championships and set 23 national records in
the sportsman class. He also cap­tured 16 national titles and one world
championship on the International Hot Rod Association Tour. During his
heyday in the 1970s, Boertman competed in as many as 30 competitions each
year in all corners of the country.
Inducted into the Michigan Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1990,
Boertman received plenty of media attention during his racing years. Four
times he was named Car Craft Magazine “Driver of the Year.” He also won
awards
as the IHRA “Driver of the Year”, Super Stock Magazine’s “Mechanic of the
Year” and the NHRA North Central Division “Person of the Year.”
In 1985, Boertman, at age 45, came back from a seven-year
retirement to win the world Super Stock title and become the winningest
sportsman driver in drag racing history. That victory also netted him $12,000.

It’s not much of a stretch to say that professional hockey in Muskegon was
built around Joe Kastelic. An eight-year veteran of the International Hockey
League, the left winger had spent time in Fort Wayne and Louisville before
his arrival in Muskegon in 1961. The Zephyrs, entering only their
second year in the league, had acquired one of the league’s premier talents.
Kastelic was in his prime and it showed as he posted a
career-high 54 assists and a team-leading 101 points as the Zephyrs posted a
43-23-2 regular season mark. The team won eight of nine playoff contests en
route to their first ever IHL Turner Cup championship.
During his seven seasons in Muskegon, Kastelic never scored
fewer than 78 points. In fact, he scored 78 points in the final season of
his career (1967-68), helping the Muskegon franchise win their second Turner
Cup championship. Many believe that team was the best in Muskegon hockey
history, featuring the likes of former
National Hockey League star Carl
Brewer, as well as Muskegon Area Sports Hall of Fame inductees Bryan McLay
and Gary Ford.
Kastelic grew up in Ontario, Canada, the son of immigrant
parents from Slovenia who came to the small northern town to work in the
gold mines. A natural athlete, Kastelic played in the top baseball minor
league in Canada and was courted by the Boston Red Sox as a first baseman
and outfielder, before deciding on hockey.
He retired in 1968 after a 15-year career in the IHL. When
he left the game, he was the league’s all-time leading scorer with 551
goals. The mark lasted 24 years before it was
topped. Kastelic’s career total of 583 assists ranked fourth. His 63
goals scored in 67 games during the 1962-63 season was fifth in league
history at the time of his retirement.

Sherman Poppen was just trying to get
his daughters out of the house on Christmas Day in 1965, so he bolted
together a pair of kid's skis, then gave the creation to them
so they could ride down the
Lake Michigan dunes behindhis house.
Who would have thought then thathis
idea would evolve into the popular pastime of snowboarding, which now is anOlympic sport?
His kids had so much fun with his contraption that Poppen went intohis workshop and customized a board bettersuited for snow. His wife, Nancy, christened the invention the “snurfer,”
noting that the board allowed the rider to surf on snow. Theidea was picked up locally by BrunswickCorp., which manufactured the snurfer fordistribution around the country.
It would bealmost 20
years before snowboarding reallytook
off, but Poppen’s invention was not forgotten.
Poppen was presented the "Tranny Award" in 1995 at the Fifth Annual
TransWorld Snowboarding Industry
Conference, hosted in Banff, Alberta, Canada. Given annually to an
individual in the snowboarding industry for lifetime achievement in the
sport, the honor has been presented to the biggest names in the industry,
including Jake Burton Carpenter, Tom Sims, Dimitrije Milovich, and Craig
Kelly. Hailed as the “Father of Snowboarding,”
Poppen also was featured on the DiscoveryChannel’s “Inventions” program for hissnurfer.A Muskegon High School graduate, Poppen was a
successful and civic-minded businessman. He also was a skilled sailorand longtime member of the Muskegon YachtClub. Following his retirement, Poppen took to the hills of Colorado
to learn how to snowboard, riding the slopes with kids one-third his age.
“I figured I started this thing,” Poppen told The Muskegon
Chronicle, “so I’d better get into it.”